This is a day appointed by the President for humiliation,
fasting, and prayer. Yet the Marylanders in possession of the passport office
report the following in the Dispatch of this date:
“Passports.—The
passport office was besieged yesterday and last night by large crowds of
persons soliciting permission to leave the city, in order that some relaxation
might be had from its busy scenes. Among those who obtained them were His
Excellency Jefferson Davis and his Honor Joseph Mayo, both designing to pay a
short visit to the neighboring County of Chesterfield.”
We fast, certainly — and feel greatly humiliated at the loss
of New Orleans and Vicksburg — and we pray, daily.
Yesterday Fort Sumter suffered much from the enemy's
batteries, and much apprehension is felt for its fate.
Gen. Lee, it is said, is not permitted to follow Meade, who
is retrograding, being weakened by detachments. A few weeks hence the fall
campaign will open in Virginia, when the very earth may tremble again with the
thunders of war, and the rivulets may again spout human blood.
There were no letters to-day, for the reason that last night
the clerks in the post-office resigned, their salaries not being sufficient to
support them. I hope a force will be detailed, to-morrow, to distribute the
letters.
I met Prof. A. T. Bledsoe to-day as he was ambling toward
the passport office. He said he was just about to start for London, where he
intended publishing his book — on slavery, I believe. He has a free passage on
one of the government steamers, to sail from Wilmington. He asked me if I
fasted to-day; I answered yes, as usual! He then bid me good-by, and at
parting I told him I hoped he would not find us all hanged when he returned. I
think it probable he has a mission from the President, as well as his book to
publish.
SOURCE: John Beauchamp Jones, A Rebel War Clerk's
Diary at the Confederate States Capital, Volume 2, p.
20-1
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